Amitabh Bachchan's Witty Take on Car & Cricket Phrases in Daily Life

Megastar Amitabh Bachchan took to his blog to reflect on the curious origins of everyday phrases. He noted how common expressions often stem from the world of cars, such as "hit a speed breaker" or "putting the brakes on." He also drew parallels with cricketing terms like "bouncer" and "sixer" that have become part of daily speech. Bachchan mused on the continuous development and maturation of human vocabulary.

Key Points: Amitabh Bachchan on Car & Cricket Phrases in Daily Speech

  • Everyday language borrows from cars and cricket
  • Phrases like "hit a speed breaker" or "pressing the accelerator" are common
  • Terms like "bouncer" and "sixer" seamlessly enter speech
  • Bachchan reflects on the evolving vocabulary of human expression
2 min read

Big B shares light-hearted take on life's 'speed breakers' and 'sixers'

Megastar Amitabh Bachchan humorously dissects how car and cricket terms like 'speed breaker' and 'sixer' become everyday expressions.

Big B shares light-hearted take on life's 'speed breakers' and 'sixers'
"So much still to learn and understand .. each moment shifts gears so to say .. ( why the heck do we always give similes related to a car, or games ) .. !! - Amitabh Bachchan"

Mumbai, Feb 28

Megastar Amitabh Bachchan reflected on the curious ways in which everyday language borrows from cars and cricket, observing how common expressions often stem from the world of sport and the road.

Taking to his blog, Amitabh shared a motley of phrases used in daily life, such as hard work has "hit a speed breaker" to "pressing the accelerator" when picking up pace, or "putting the brakes on" at the first sign of trouble.

"So much still to learn and understand .. each moment shifts gears so to say .. ( why the heck do we always give similes related to a car, or games ) .. !! 'my work and hard work has come upon with a speed breaker,' 'i was trundling along quite well, but decided to speed up, so pressed the accelerator', 'when i sense trouble, i just put my brakes on'."

He also pointed to expressions like "running out of gas" when energy dips and not appreciating "backseat driving" when unsolicited opinions come in.

"I just got a green light for my venture, and took off," he wrote.

Drawing parallels with cricketing terms, Bachchan mentioned how remarks such as "that was a bouncer" when something goes over one's head, "well left" when choosing not to engage, or calling an achievement a "sixer" have seamlessly become part of common speech.

" 'ok ! so that was a bouncer' (the ball that is bowled going above the head of the batsman - so what was said just went above my head .. could not understand ) 'well left ..' (did not attempt to put bat to ball, and allowed the ball to go past batsman in crease, in cricket terms .. a decisive decision for not getting involved, in what was suggested ) 'O boy that's a sixer !' ( in cricket when the batsman hits the ball beyond the boundary of the playing field, without a bounce , six runs a max - your achievement was incredible ) and similarly .. bowled .. self goal.. hit wicket .. run out .."

"The vocabulary of the human .. how it was developed and how it keeps maturing day in day out ..Ok Ef .. ! retired hurt .. !!!! going for a (nap emoji).

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Cricket and cars are in our DNA as Indians, no wonder they dominate our language! From "hit for a six" to "changing gears," it's fascinating. Great observation by Amitabh ji.
A
Arjun K
Love this! It shows how much cricket has influenced our daily life beyond just being a sport. When my son aced his exams, we all said he "hit a sixer!" 🏏
M
Michael C
As someone new to India, this is a brilliant insight into the culture. I've heard colleagues use these terms and now I understand the context better. The "backseat driving" one is universal though!
S
Shreya B
Respectfully, while it's a fun observation, I wish he'd also reflect on more substantial issues sometimes. With his platform, deeper social commentary could have a bigger impact. Just a thought.
K
Karthik V
Haha, this is so relatable! My dad's favorite advice is "beta, life mein kabhi accelerator, kabhi brake...balance rakhna." The man is a national treasure for a reason.

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